Updated: Super PAC Targeting Incumbents Gets First Win

Updated, March 8, 2:47 p.m.: The Campaign for Primary Accountability got its first big win this week, when Ohio incumbent Rep. Jean Schmidt lost the Republican primary to opponent Brad Wenstrum. It was a surprise defeat for Schmidt, who has been in office for seven years. Wenstrum, a podiatrist and Iraq War veteran, has never held political office. In an article this morning, The New York Times credited the Super PAC with "increasing Congress' sense of insecurity."

Original story:

Houston construction mogul Leo Linbeck III, the self-described "conservative communitarian" who has led a national effort to shift control of the nation's health from the federal government to the states, is now trying to shake up the country's political primaries.

He has poured more than $775,000 into a new Super PAC — the now $1.8 million Campaign for Primary Accountability — designed to fund primary challengers to longtime incumbents on both sides of the political spectrum.

From an issues standpoint, Linbeck can't be described as middle of the road. He's been a staunch advocate for smaller government, from backing local control of health care to charter schools to abolishing the federal income tax. His father co-founded the powerful tort reform group Texans for Lawsuit Reform.

But the idea behind the Super PAC, he said, is strictly nonpartisan: It's to level the playing field in primary elections so that incumbents don't automatically have a financial leg up, or a so-called message monopoly. Linbeck said the Super PAC won't target freshmen or two-term lawmakers, or those who perform strongly in the polls. They're not going to operate in swing districts, which already have accountability based on their fluid politics. And they'll only back candidates they think are credible.

The money for the effort is largely Texas-based. Of the 16 other contributors to the group, 13 are Texans, including Midland oil and gas investor Tim Dunn, who contributed $350,000. Other than Linbeck, the biggest single donor is Joe Ricketts, the Denver-based founder of an online brokerage firm, who gave $500,000. Wisconsin Libertarian advocate Eric O'Keefe, who pushed the Health Care Compact with Linbeck and helped organize the Super PAC, contributed $100,000.

Linbeck and his supporters say that voters are disgusted by the federal deficit and blame Congress, but that incumbents are getting re-elected anyway. The problem, they say, is that most congressional districts are controlled by a single political party — and that there's little incentive for primary challengers to try to unseat an incumbent backed by special interests and lobby funding.

"Primaries are basically the way the deck gets stacked. Incumbents have all the advantages — money, name ID. The general elections are not competitive," Linbeck said. "The only place you can really have your voice heard is in the primary. We want people to know that, and we want them to turn out."

Contributions to Campaign for Primary Accountability, Inc.

Contributor

Employer

Title

City

ZIP

Date

Amount

Leo Linbeck, III

Aquinas Companies, LLC

President & CEO

Houston, TX

77227

12/28/11

$500,000

J. Joe Ricketts

Hugo Enterprises, LLC

Businessman & Philanthropist

Denver, CO

80223

12/12/11

$500,000

Tim Dunn

CrownQuest Operating, LLC

CEO

Midland, TX

79710

12/28/11

$350,000

Leo Linbeck, III

Aquinas Companies, LLC

President & CEO

Houston, TX

77227

12/30/11

$175,042

Leo Linbeck, III

Aquinas Companies, LLC

President & CEO

Houston, TX

77227

11/22/11

$100,000

Eric O'Keefe

Self Employed

Investor

Spring Green, WI

53588

12/29/11

$100,000

W Corporation

N/A

N/A

Houston, TX

77002

12/9/11

$20,000

Campr II Partners

N/A

N/A

El Paso, TX

79944

12/27/11

$18,750

Miguel Fernandez

Transtelco

Executive

El Paso, TX

79901

12/21/11

$12,500

J.A. Cardwell

C&R Distributing, LLC

CEO

El Paso, TX

79926

12/27/11

$6,250

William Gordon, III

Fairhill School

Director of Psychological Services

Dallas, TX

75230

11/28/11

$5,000

J. Kirk Robison

Pizza Properties, Inc.

Restaurant Franchisee

El Paso, TX

79902

12/22/11

$4,000

Rhett Gist

Self Employed

Engineer

Midland, TX

77227

12/27/11

$2,000

Dennis R. Johnson

Summit Petroleum Inc.

President & CEO

Midland, TX

79705

12/7/11

$1,000

Mark Thomas

Plains Marketing, L.P

Oil Marketing & Trans.

Midland, TX

79705

12/22/11

$1,000

Ike J. Monty

Investment Builders, Inc.

President

El Paso, TX

79925

12/22/11

$500

Greg M. Wright

Self Employed

Insurance & Investments

Midland, TX

79705

12/22/11

$250

Total:

$1,796,292

In Texas, where the primary date is in flux, the Super PAC will support the primary opponents of two longtime Democrats, U.S. Reps. Eddie Bernice Johnson of Dallas and Silvestre Reyes of El Paso. Johnson has been in office for nearly two decades; Reyes for almost 16 years. (Linbeck said his group would target Republicans here too, once the field is more settled.)

The Super PAC's effort to unseat Reyes has drawn some scrutiny; the organization received nearly $20,000 from Campr II Partners, which is owned by the El Paso father-in-law of Robert "Beto" O'Rourke, who is running in the Democratic primary. Reyes slammed the new Super PAC, saying it's an example of "special interest money and family wealth" being used to "undermine the vote and will of the people." Reyes said those who are funding the Campaign for Primary Accountability include wealthy El Pasoans and corporations that have maxed out their campaign-giving to his opponent, O'Rourke, and are using loopholes to pump even more cash into his race.

Linbeck said that contributions don't drive the group's decisions on which races to get involved in, and that he expected it was obvious to the Super PAC's funders which incumbents were at risk.

The biggest name the Super PAC is backing so far? Rep. Dennis Kucinich, who is running in a Democratic primary in Ohio against longtime incumbent Rep. Marcy Kaptur, who has been in office for 15 terms, and whose district was redrawn. The group is also playing in Republican races in Illinois and Alabama, among others.

"We've got people on both sides of the political spectrum mad at us," Linbeck said.

Leo Linbeck III is a major donor to The Texas Tribune.

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.